View Single Post
  #17   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
DerbyDad03 DerbyDad03 is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14,845
Default OT Plane Crash because of Birds

On Jan 16, 10:44*am, dpb wrote:
On Jan 16, 8:21*am, Smitty Two wrote:
... As far as the pilot being a hero, sure, he did a nice job. Any pilot
could have easily done the same thing. Planes fly perfectly well without
engine power. Only caveat is, they fly a descending course.


...

That's utter BS about "any pilot" and "easily". *The descending course
from perhaps 8000-ft over the city that Airbus was "flying perfectly
well" w/o power is mostly flying just a little better than a rock--
they're not gliders.

That one would hope that any commercial pilot would be capable of the
feat is comforting thought if one flies; reality is far different.
Even whether this guy could duplicate the result is probably 50:50 at
best; undoubtedly his chances of getting it to the ditching spot would
be pretty good but the ditching itself would be a crapshoot to come
off that well.

The guy was outstanding (and I suspect, if asked, would say had some
luck on his side to boot)...

--


One of the things mentioned by some of the talking heads, while in no
way diminishing the fantastic job done by the crew, was that pilots
train on flight simulators for just such emergencies.

That got me thinking. Do you think that the folks that wrote the
software for the simulators were able to create the mathematical
models required to simulate the drag of the Hudson River on the
engines of an Airbus A320?

Assuming they practice water landings, how could the pilot adjust for
current, choppiness, etc? I think that at the point that they've opted
for a water landing, there are going to be a huge number of factors
that no simulator practice is going to help them with. The best that
can be hoped for is that the 80% of things covered by the simulator is
enough to cover all the unknowns.